Hyperallergic Article about Governors Island Art Fair

The annual Governors Island Art Fair (GIAF), which features the work of emerging artists from around the region and across the globe, opens this Saturday, September 5, and continues every Saturday and Sunday in September.

For the first time, the fair will present artist installations in the Fort Jay magazine, a series of six cavernous brick chambers underneath Fort Jay that housed ammunition and explosives during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Varying in size, the magazine spaces will feature video and sound installations that take advantage of the raw environment and underground acoustics. Additionally, the 2015 edition of GIAF will feature more outdoor installations than previous years, creating a pathway of art between Fort Jay and the historic homes of military officers at Colonels’ Row— the fair’s primary location on the Island.

More here

Bronco Gallery July Shows

Bronco

Tatyana Ostapenko
www.tatyanaostapenko.com
The Bronco Gallery is a small gallery space based out of
a 1991 Ford Bronco. Emily Wobb and Maggie Heath
started the gallery because they wanted to give
emerging artists a platform and they didn’t have a
building, they had an SUV.
Being a 4WD space the gallery is meant to not only
provide another gallery within the established art
community in Portland, but also engage in dialog with
non-typical art events. The Bronco Gallery’s opening
receptions celebrate alongside institutions, galleries,
festivals, rodeos, car shows and the like, by tailgating
these events.
www.broncogallery.com
Tatyana Ostapenko was born and raised in Soviet
Union (now independent Ukraine.) She holds a BA
in Spanish and International Business from Georgia
State University and a BFA in Studio Practice at
Portland State University. He work focuses on the
recent history of once-Soviet states: the enormous
changes and simultaneous lack of change, social
ambivalence, political uncertainty, and the daily
experience of people caught in the midst of
July Tailgates
July 23 // 6PM Portland International Raceway, 49th Anniversary Race
July 31 & August 1 // ALL DAY Seattle Art Fair

 

Bronco at Motocross

Siren Nation's Art Show and Fundraiser

Stop by Olympic Mills building this Saturday to see work by more than 40 local artists and a dueling easel painting demo I will be doing with one and only Hyunju Kim.

107 SE Washington St, Portland OR  

6pm to 9pm

BFA Thesis Exhibition "Fences, Buckets, Mud and Heels"

Procession

Opening reception

Friday, June 5th, 4-7pm 

Littman Gallery

1825 SW Broadway St, Portland, Oregon 97201

Artist Statement

The major themes of my work revolve around the recent history of once-Soviet states: the enormous changes and simultaneous lack of change, social ambivalence, political uncertainty, and the daily experience of common people caught in the midst of momentous changes.
I am after the familiar yet confounding, commonplace yet unsettling, the uncannily mundane, and the ordinary strangeness. My subjects’ confusing and confounding motivations expose the rudderless and rapidly shifting environs of the places torn off from established meaning. I wish to communicate the reluctant repulsion/attraction I feel toward my place of origin, exposing the unjustified sentimentality of nostalgia along with the émigré’s moral difficulty at passing judgments on the land she abandoned.

 

 

https://www.facebook.com/events/278213459016083/

Take Care / Make Many BFA Thesis Exhibition

 

AB Lobby Gallery / Portland State University / School of Art + Design

Art Building, First Floor, 2000 SW 5th Ave., Portland, Oregon 97201

Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday, 10-5 p.m., or by appointment: tnikolai@pdx.edu

 

MK Gallery / Portland State University / School of Art + Design

Art Building, Second Floor, Room 207, 2000 SW 5th Ave., Portland, Oregon 97201

Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday, 10-5 p.m., or by appointment: tnikolai@pdx.edu

 

Autzen Gallery + NH Video Display Case / Portland State University / School of Art + Design

Neuberger Hall, Second Floor, 724 SW Harrison St., Portland Oregon 97201

Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday, 10-5 p.m., or by appointment: tnikolai@pdx.edu

 

Littman Gallery / Portland State University

Smith Center, Second Floor, 1825 SW Broadway Ave., Portland, Oregon 97201

Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday, 12-4 p.m., 503-725-5656, littmanandwhite@gmail.com

 

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

take care / make many

 

BFA Thesis Exhibitions 2015 / School of Art + Design / COTA / Portland State University

 

Exhibition Dates: Friday, June 5 – Friday, June 12, 2015 (Littman Gallery until Friday, June 26)

 

Opening Reception (all venues): Friday, June 5, 2015, 4-7 PM

 

Galleries

 

AB Lobby Gallery: Edward Ershbock

 

MK Gallery: Christina Boom, Chang*diaz, Ben Miller

 

Autzen Gallery: Ryan Collard, Matthew Hall, Maggie Heath, Hannah Pope

 

Neuberger Hall Video Display Case: Ryan Collard

 

Littman Gallery: Maggie Irwin, Kate McCourt, Tatyana Ostapenko, Craig Overbey, Michelle Wood

 

SW 5th Ave. between SW Jackson St. and SW Lincoln St.: Will Elder

 

Exhibition Statement

 

The School of Art + Design / Art Practices Bachelor of Fine Arts Program 2014-15 presents take care / make many, the thesis exhibition of its fourteen graduating students. Their diverse practices incorporate painting, sculpture, drawing, video, installation, photography, print and digital media, representing the full breath of the program. take care / make many is exhibited across PSU’s campus art galleries and is open to the public from Friday, June 5 through Friday, June 12 (Littman Gallery until Friday, June 26). 

 

The BFA Program in Art Practices offered by the School of Art + Design at Portland State University is designed to provide a selected group of Art Practices students with one-year of specialized studies before graduation. The program is intended to complement the Art Practices BA/BS degree tracks and to facilitate an open dialog on contemporary art, its practices, and its cultural implications. This experience is offered as an extra step towards a future professional career. Upon admission, students commit to an intensive one-year residency in which they research, practice, construct, and discuss a body of work, in part to be presented as a public exhibition at the end of the program. These exhibitions represent a documentation of that experience and highlight some of its varied manifestations. 

My work in CAP Art Auction

 

Join us on Saturday, May 2, 2015, to Celebrate 26 years of Art!

 

 

CAP’s Annual Art Auction is one of the agency’s two major annual fundraisers, the other being AIDS Walk Portland. We depend on the Art Auction not only to fund our work, but to build community in the fight against HIV and to keep awareness of the epidemic alive. This awareness is key to conquering the virus. Last year, 1,500 people attended the Art Auction.

 

One of Portland’s keystone fundraisers, the Art Auction was created by the local arts community in 1989 to raise funds in the fight against HIV/AIDS.

 

http://www.capartauction.org/

 

 

 

Portland Monthly Mag On 503/971 Show

Pacific Northwest College of Art (PNCA) is to open the first juried undergraduate exhibition in its brand new Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Center for Art and Design on Thursday (April 2), but with a twist: For the first time, the college is opening the show to art students from four other Portland colleges and universities.

The exhibition—entitled 503/971 after the two Portland area codes—will feature works not only from PNCA students, but also from students of Reed College, Portland State University, Lewis and Clark College and Oregon College of Art and Craft.

The show aims to illustrate and appreciate the variance in college-level art programs, and to consider PNCA’s position within Portland’s art scene from “a trans-institutional perspective”.

Organized by two PNCA students, Joseph Greer and Joseph McGehee, 503/971 will be juried by three contemporary art curators from Portland: Libby Werbel of the Portland Museum of Modern Art, Kristan Kennedy of the Portland Institute of Contemporary Art and Robert Snowden of Yale Union. 

The Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Center for Art and Design is PNCA’s new home in Portland’s North Park Blocks. The refurbished former post office building houses the 5,000-square-foot New Commons where the exhibition will be presented.

 503/971 opens on April 2 in PNCA’s New Commons, and runs through April 29.

link

Juried Inaugural Exhibition at PNCA New Commons

Sunday

PNCA To Host First Regional Juried Undergraduate Exhibition
Featuring work by students from five Portland colleges and universities

503/971
New Commons, PNCA
April 2-29, 2015
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 2 from 6-9pm

Portland, OR—March 3, 2015—Pacific Northwest College of Art (PNCA) presents 503/971, the inaugural juried undergraduate exhibition in its new home, the Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Center for Art and Design. For the first time, PNCA has opened the exhibition to undergraduate art students from colleges and universities throughout Portland including Portland State University, Pacific Northwest College of Art, Lewis and Clark College, Reed College, and Oregon College of Art and Craft. Organized by two students, Joseph McGehee and Joseph Greer, 503/971 is juried by three of the city’s top contemporary curators, Kristan Kennedy (Portland Institute for Contemporary Art), Robert Snowden (Yale Union), Libby Werbel (Portland Museum of Modern Art). 503/971 opens April 2, 2015 in PNCA’s New Commons and runs through April 29, 2015. An opening reception is scheduled for April 2, 6-9pm.

The exhibition poses a trans-institutional perspective as a means of considering PNCA’s position within expanded regional arts and culture networks. Recognizing the diversity of collegiate art programs, this exhibition will act to assemble a collective, media-blind survey of the formal and conceptual investigations within our region. 503/971celebrates the future of PNCA, Portland’s art community, and the potential for collaboration between academic institutions and individuals alike.

The title of the exhibition, 503/971, makes reference to the old and the new, to shared histories and futures, and with a nod to the PNCAbuilding’s history as a federal post office, to networks and communication. And 503/971 celebrates the future of PNCA as a member of Portland’s art community, and the potential for collaboration between academic institutions and individuals alike.

Annual Juried Show of PSU Student work

LITTMAN GALLERY

3rd Annual Juried Exhibition of PSU Student Works 
Artists To Be Announced 
Jurors: Modou Dieng and Elizabeth Spavento 

On view: March 4–24
Reception: Wednesday, March 4, 5–8:00 PM

 

Exhibiting Artists:

Natalie Graff, Aerial Spew

Amrita Khalsa, Impression

Brittany Maddocks, a) Jenga b) Sponges

Andrea Kerr, Untitled

Melissa J. Armstrong, Belle ePop 10

Kyle Lee, Save the Portland airport carpet

Hyunju Kim, Reflection

Jennifer Vaughn, Pressure

Tatyana Ostapenko, Kiev Winter

Michael Hull, Daniel

Abby Moe, Riot

Danny Shapiro, Dollar Bill (edition of 50)

Phil Gregory, Untitled

Conrad Crespin, Untitled (series)

Ryan Gregory, The Color in Pain (series)

Mark Nilson, Obstruction

Edward Ershbock, Suspicious Baggage

A.J. Markow, Untitled

Emily Lewis, With Green and Grey

Daniel Liam Gill, Binah

Shannon Kidd, Depression

Samantha Loren, The Collaborative Curating Style (for large group)

http://littmanwhite.tumblr.com/upcoming